A Helena woman who pleaded guilty to delivering children to a convicted rapist was sentenced to 100 years in the Montana Women's Prison Tuesday afternoon in Lewis and Clark County District Court.

Kimberly Elvera Feigert, 32, was also labeled a tier one sex offender.

District Court Judge Kathy Seeley restricted Feigert from being eligible for parole for the first 25 years of her sentence.

Deputy County Attorney Melissa Broch and probation and parole officer Lloyd Dopp, who conducted the presentence investigation report and testified during Tuesday's hearing, portrayed Feigert as someone who needs the highly structured environment of prison to completely benefit from the treatment programs she is required to take.

Per Seeley's sentence, Feigert must complete the first two phases of the state's three-phase sex offender treatment program prior to being released.

Dopp also stated during his testimony that he believes Feigert has not fully taken responsibility for her actions. Despite a large amount of correspondence between Feigert and the child rapist in which the two planned their crimes, Dopp said she still claims to not remember taking part in them.

Dopp also said Feigert continues to claim that she was being controlled through the use of drugs.

Feigert was arrested in January 2017 after allegedly bringing a young girl to the Helena building where convicted rapist Andrew Douglas Paige was receiving sex offender treatment, knowing he would rape the girl in a bathroom. The allegations came to light after investigators found photos of the child in the bathroom on Paige's phone, court documents state.

Court documents state Paige and Feigert talked about the alleged molestation in recorded phone calls he made from jail, and she said the girl "would not tell." Feigert was later accused of taking and distributing sexual photographs of a girl under age 10.

Feigert read a prepared statement during her sentencing hearing expressing remorse for her actions and claiming a resolve to take the court-prescribed treatment seriously.

"I'm sorry I lost my way," she said, sobbing. "I ask for the chance to turn my words into actions."

In this episode: A Helena woman sentenced to 100 years for delivering children to convicted rapist, Helena's public school buildings won't reopen this spring, Camp Child to house God's Love residents, Bad Betty's Barbecue revives old food truck to survive pandemic restrictions and the new Equity Fountain installed where Helena's Confederate monument once stood.